3D printing company growing in Nevada, adds to manufacturing base

Inside the Pictographics print shop, a set of realistic miniature figures are displayed on a table. They only stand a few inches tall, but the 3D-printed portraits are extraordinarily detailed, from the print on their clothes to the shading on their hands.

Craig Miller, president and CEO at Pictographics, talks to a reporter at his Las Vegas plant Wednesday, May 16, 2018. K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal @KMCannonPhoto

Inside the Pictographics print shop, a set of realistic miniature figures are displayed on a table. They only stand a few inches tall, but the 3D-printed portraits are extraordinarily detailed, from the print on their clothes to the shading on their hands.

“Our hope is to continue to grow Nevada’s manufacturing base along with attracting other companies inside that supply chain,” Smith said. “We believe in growing our economy by playing to our strengths, and we know we have a story to tell in manufacturing.”

The GOED approved about $13.7 million in tax abatements for existing, expanding and new Nevada companies in return for more than $151.6 million in new tax revenue. These companies include:

Axion Corporation

Approved tax abatements: $2,961,819

Axion, a provider of satellite-based entertainment service, plans to move its corporate headquarters to Reno and begin operations by November. The company intends to hire 205 employees by the end of its second year of operations at an average hourly wage of $40.60, and it will hire 511 employees by the end of its fifth year of operations.

Caremark LLC

Approved tax abatements: $727,335

Caremark, a subsidiary of CVS Health, is considering adding a prescription management service center in Las Vegas. It would hire 102 employees over the first 24 months of operations at an average hourly wage of $25.73.

Fortress Innovations LLC

Approved tax abatements: $548,913

Fortress Innovations, a manufacturing and real estate development company, is looking to establish operations in Mesquite. The company anticipates a 315,000-square-foot manufacturing facility, six to 10 demo homes and additional storage space. It plans to hire 30 employees within its first year of operations, paying them an average hourly wage of $25.18.

Fulcrum Sierra Biofuels LLC

Approved tax abatements: $1,909,038

Fulcrum Sierra is planning to expand its feedstock processing facility in Storey County, adding a 29,000-square-foot building to accommodate new equipment. The company plans to add 13 positions at an average hourly rate of $22.04.

KRS Global Biotechnology Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $2,750,636

A custom pharmaceutical company, KRS Global is considering building a licensed pharmaceutical manufacturing facility in Nevada. It plans to hire 50 employees over its first year of operations at an average hourly wage of $25.

Polaris Industries Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $1,051,521

Polaris, a power sports vehicle manufacturer, is considering opening a 500,000-square-foot distribution center in Fernley, which would be operational in the second quarter of 2019. The company intends to hire 64 employees at an average hourly wage of $21.95.

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $277,390

Ritchie Bros. is planning to expand operations in Southern Nevada by hiring 25 employees over the next year and establishing a 169,080-square-foot distribution warehouse facility. The employees would make an average hourly wage of $22.94.

Sephora USA Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $3,128,708

Sephora is considering opening a 715,000-square-foot regional distribution center in the Las Vegas Valley. The cosmetic company would hire 60 employees within its first year of operations. It aims to hire Nevada residents, including qualified veterans and disabled people, and would pay an average hourly wage of $24.05.

3PEA International Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $157,530

3PEA, a prepaid card program provider, is seeking to move to a 21,000-square-foot facility in Southern Nevada. The company plans to hire 35 employees over the next year at an average hourly wage of $40.20.

Alpha Guardian

Approved tax abatements: $67,991

Residential safe, security and storage company Alpha Guardian is planning to expand its Las Vegas operations with a new 100,000-square-foot space. It plans to hire 35 employees over the first year at an average hourly wage of $26.92.

Cannae Holdings Inc.

Approved tax abatements: $177,195

Investment company Cannae is considering buying a headquarters operations adjacent to its Las Vegas facility, which would be ready late 2018 or early 2019. It plans to hire 50 employees within the first year at an average hourly wage of $36.90.

Henderson is slated to be home to a new Google data center in December 2020.
The Governor’s Office of Economic Development approved $25.2 million in tax abatements for Design LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Google.
The company plans to build the data center on 64 acres of land on Warm Springs Road west of Boulder Highway.

Anthony Rufo talks about his new product, an in-home digital companion and monitor.

Anthony Rufo talks about his new product, HAPPIE Home technology, an in-home digital companion and monitor designed for unpaid family caregivers that gives personalized alerts, messages and reminders. Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye

Holiday parades help bring shoppers to Downtown Summerlin

Sports Town USA floor manager Angela Gardonio talks about the work that goes into the Downtown Summerlin holiday parades and how they benefit her and other businesses there.

Final vote on CG Technology

Final commission vote on the $2 million settlement for CG Technology.

Happie Home Startup Establishing Headquarters In Las Vegas

Digital companion startup company Happie Home is establishing its headquarters in Las Vegas after receiving tax abatements from the Governor's Office of Economic Development on Nov. 15. (Bailey Schulz/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

A Facebook-branded space inside of Macy’s at the Fashion Show shopping center

A Facebook-branded space inside of Macy’s at the Fashion Show shopping center will showcase 13 small businesses in November and December and seven in January. Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye

T-Mobile uses ticketing data to plan for event

T-Mobile Executive Director of Arena Operations explains how ticket sales data and demographics help plan staffing, vendors, parking and operations for an event.

Costco opens its doors in southwest Henderson

Costco has opened its fifth Las Vegas-area location near the intersection of St. Rose Parkway and Amigo Street. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Las Vegas strip mall and office park

The Krausz Cos. and WG Group bought a strip mall and an office park in Las Vegas for nearly $80 million total. They acquired a portion of Tropicana Beltway Center in the southwest valley for $59 million. They also acquired the Westbay office complex in the Las Vegas Medical District. The buyers are former owners of The Gramercy, a once-mothballed mixed-use project in the Las Vegas suburbs. They sold The Gramercy in phases for more than $100 million.

Mario Barth talks about the growth of the tattoo industry

Celebrity tattoo artist and business owner Mario Barth talks about the growth of the tattoo industry at The World of Tattoo industry trade show at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas

$7.5M Las Vegas pot dispensary opens near Las Vegas Strip

Planet 13, which bills itself as one of the largest dispensaries in the world, opened to the public Thursday. It has entertainment including an interactive floor and floating orbs. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Caesars CEO to step down next year

Caesars Entertainment Corp. CEO Mark Frissora will leave the casino company in February. Frissora has been CEO since July 2015. He was named CEO right after Caesars' operating company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Caesars Entertainment emerged from bankruptcy protection in October 2017 Before Caesars, Frissora spent seven years as chairman and CEO of Naples, Fla.,-based Hertz He led the consolidation of the rental-car industry through Hertz‘s acquisition of the Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group.

Planet 13 in Las Vegas adds twist to marijuana dispensary look

Planet 13, which bills itself as one of the largest dispensaries in the world, opened to the public Thursday. The dispensary is located near the intersection of Desert Inn Road and Sammy Davis Jr. Drive, near Trump International, in Las Vegas. Planet 13 has plans in the future for a coffee shop, a tasting room for marijuana-infused beer and wine, a lounge for consuming marijuana on site if that is legalized and space for food.

Caesars Entertainment opening 2 resorts in Dubai

Cove Beach will open on Meraas’ Bluewaters Island in Dubai in November and Caesars Palace Bluewaters Dubai and The Residences at Caesars Palace Bluewaters Dubai will open in December. (Caesars Entertainment)

Bellagio, MGM Resorts International’s luxury hotel turns 20

The more than 3,000-room Bellagio hotel is situated on the site of the former Dunes Hotel. The Dunes was imploded in 1993, and construction of the Bellagio started in 1996. It cost $1.6 billion to build, making it the most expensive hotel in the world at the time. The Bellagio was former Wynn Resorts Ltd. Chairman and CEO Steve Wynn’s second major casino on the Strip after The Mirage. MGM Resorts International acquired the property from Steve Wynn in 2000. (Tara Mack/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

MGM Resorts International executive and professional poker player Bobby Baldwin is set to leave MGM.

Caesars has new armed emergency response teams

Caesars Entertainment Corp. has created armed emergency response teams. They are composed of former military and law enforcement officials. "These teams provide valuable additional security capabilities,” Caesars spokeswoman Jennifer Forkish said. Caesars is hiring Security Saturation Team supervisors, managers and officers, according to LinkedIn. The company did not say how many people it plans to hire for the units. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Las Vegas, airlines prepare for CES

CES in January is expected to attract more than 180,000 attendees. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)

AGS partners with Vegas Golden Knights

AGS is the nation’s second-largest manufacturer of Class II slot machines used primarily in tribal jurisdictions. It announced a marketing partnership with the Vegas Golden Knights NHL team. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Lehman Brothers bet big on Las Vegas

Lehman Brothers collapsed 10 years ago, helping send the country into the Great Recession.

DJI vice president of policy and public affairs discusses using remote identification on drones. (Bailey Schulz/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Drones and public safety in Nevada

Two representatives in the drone industry discuss UAV's impact on public safety. (Bailey Schulz/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Frontier Airlines to launch flights from Las Vegas to Mexico

Frontier, a Denver-based ultra-low-cost carrier, will become the first airline in more than a decade to offer international service to Canada and Mexico from Las Vegas when flights to Cancun and Los Cabos begin Dec. 15. (Rick Velotta/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

MGM Resorts International CEO Jim Murren addresses Oct. 1 lawsuits

MGM Resorts International Chairman and CEO Jim Murren addresses criticism his company has received for filing a lawsuit against the survivors of the Oct. 1 shooting. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

MGM Resorts International opens the doors on MGM Springfield

Massachusetts’ first hotel-casino opens in downtown Springfield. The $960 million MGM Springfield has 252 rooms and 125,000-square-feet of casino. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal)